BLOWBACK

John Ridley is wrong

A former Writers Guild president explains.
By Frank Pierson
January 14, 2008
» Discuss Article    (18 Comments)

When there were rumors of an A-list screenwriter going "financial core" from the Writers Guild of America, I was as surprised as John Ridley was to find out it was him. His resume is mostly pretty good television episodic writing, and he's made a good and well-deserved living doing that, as well as representing himself as the voice of Hollywood writers on the Huffington Post, NPR and in occasional Op-Ed articles here and there.

His assertion that I, as president of the Writers Guild, once gave him "a new orifice" because he complained of the lack of diversity in guild membership, is something I do not recall having done. The issues of diversity have always been a deep guild concern, but employment is not in the guild's control — whomever is employed by the studios becomes a member of the guild. The guild does not hire nor fire.

During and after my time as president, the guild organized a number of programs to give blacks and Latinos chances to do nonwriting services on shows, to at least get a foot in the door, and these programs were modestly effective. When I was a producer of "Have Gun — Will Travel" in the 1960s, at some risk and considerable trouble, I cast blacks, Latinos and blacklisted actors and writers, bringing them into the employable stream. Because I don't recall the phone call Ridley refers to, I can only reply in a general sense to Ridley's charge: If he had problems with how the guild was run, the best way for him to change it was to work from within. So far as I know, he has never worked on a guild committee. He was invited to run for office by the nominating committee of the guild in the interests of diversifying our board membership, but after a brief flirtation, Ridley refused the opportunity to educate and invigorate that body.

Now he has abandoned the community of writers and become in effect a spokesperson for the Assn. of Motion Picture and Television Producers. He can scab-write and (under current labor law) retain all the union benefits won at great sacrifice in three major strikes over 50 years. In doing so, he only prolongs the strike he deplores by doing the writing he couldn't get without it.

What Ridley does not mention is that he has a contract to write "Red Tails," a movie to be directed by George Lucas — low budget, by the way — this year. How convenient this seems. That he is now — having gone fi-core — free to write his first real movie during the strike.

And even so, the guild, with our continuing contributions, will take care of Ridley when he's sick, protect him from predatory rewrites, pay him his residuals and support him in his old age, and he doesn't even have to walk for it. (He is, by the way, walking by himself, the only screenwriter who has gone fi-core during the strike.)

There is a word for this: parasite.

Frank Pierson is a screenwriter whose credits include "Cool Hand Luke" and "Dog Day Afternoon."




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Discussion


Does financial-core status undermine the Writers Guild bargaining position? Discuss today's Blowback.

Comments will close after two weeks.
 
1. to quote a past president of another industry guild: "fi-core is a selfish and reprehensible moral choice." fi-core threatrens the very foundations of unions, and it is clear where ridley's loyalties lie - he goes to work for a guy who sent his membership card back to the directors guild. if ridley wants to walk, it's a free country - the federal government mandated fi-core for some specific purposes, but the ability to 'straddle the line' was an unintended consequence of a court decision. i only wish that he had not done this publicly.
Submitted by: allen smythee
12:39 PM PST, Jan 19, 2008
 
2. 1. fi-core or no, ridley's not "stealing" his benefits - he already paid for them, and had to join the wga in order to work in the first place... 2. i guess the dga doing a deal in 6 days shows what grown ups with experience in labor negotiations can do, as opposed to those using the wga as a springboard to becoming president of the teamsters
Submitted by: alan smithee
10:50 PM PST, Jan 17, 2008
 
3. Screw the screenwriters on strike. Other people--sound techs, lighting techs, stage hands, makeup artists, film crew--are out of jobs because you selfish punks want 1.25% more money. Other people are having trouble paying their mortgages and rents so the screenwriters can afford 3.5% more cups of latte at the corner Starbucks.
Submitted by: Jorge
8:00 AM PST, Jan 17, 2008
 



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